Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Six temples vandalized in Little Saigon

Official calls incidents hate crimes targeting Vietnamese American Buddhist community.

- By Stephanie Lai

Thai Viet Phan, who was recently elected to the Santa Ana City Council, was stunned when she received the advisory notice from the Buddhist temple she attended growing up.

Huong Tich Temple had been vandalized and Santa Ana police had deemed it a hate crime. It was the sixth temple to be vandalized in the area in the last month.

Outside the temple’s entrance, 15 marble Buddha and Bodhisattv­a statues were defaced with black spray paint. On the back of one read “Jesus” vertically down the spine.

“It’s beyond trespass. It’s beyond vandalism. It’s a hate crime targeted at the Vietnamese American Buddhist community, and we will not stand for that,” Phan told reporters at a news conference held outside a temple in nearby Westminste­r on Saturday.

Growing up, she attended Sunday school in her small neighborho­od temple, Huong Tich, and she made an effort to rekindle relations with her temple while recently campaignin­g for a seat on the City Council, where she will serve as the city’s first Vietnamese American council member.

Two females, wearing face masks and armed with cans of spray paint, were caught on video surveillan­ce footage late Monday evening trespassin­g and defacing statues at the Santa Ana temple. Both vandals were seen in dark clothing, one wearing a blue Patriots beanie and the other a black beanie.

Police investigat­ing all six incidents of vandalism say they could be related and are pursuing at least two perpetrato­rs. Three temples have been vandalized with black spray paint in Garden Grove, two in Santa Ana and one in Westminste­r.

A similar vandalism incident of five temples in Santa Ana and two houses of worship in Garden Grove occurred in 2018, resulting in a woman being arrested on suspicion of breaking off pieces of the statues. Police officials from the three cities have begun a coordinate­d investigat­ion and do not believe the person involved in the earlier incident is related to the current hate crime.

Sgt. Gil Hernandez said Santa Ana police have stepped up patrols at temples across the city and have been sharing evidence with neighborin­g police department­s.

“The damage to property is not what keeps us up at night or what bothers us the most, it’s the hate crime in itself and the negative impact to interfaith relations in our community,” the Venerable Vien Hay of the Dieu Ngu Temple, one of the affected temples in Westminste­r, said in Vietnamese.

The latest incident comes one month after the county released its 2019 hate crimes report, which showed a 24% rise in hate crimes from 2018.

Last year also marked the fifth straight year of increasing hate crimes in the county. With the ongoing pandemic and backlash targeting Asian Americans, officials worry the number of hate crimes will continue to grow.

Garden Grove City Councilwom­an Diedre Nguyen, who organized Saturday’s news conference, said she worried of what the hate crimes may signal for her community.

“I’m mostly scared that because of our culture, many people won’t feel comfortabl­e reporting these incidents,” Nguyen said, “but I want to get out the message that they should if they know anything.”

 ?? Huong Tich Temple ?? A STATUE at Huong Tich Temple in Little Saigon was defaced.
Huong Tich Temple A STATUE at Huong Tich Temple in Little Saigon was defaced.

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